RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Monday, January 4, 2016

Stanford Standout Christian McCaffrey Reminds NFL Quarterback Kirk Cousins Of Former Hawkeye Dazzler Tim Dwight. 'Dude Could Score Anytime He Touched the Ball,' Cousins Says

By RON MALY

This interesting tweet from  Washington Redskins quarterback Kirk Cousins is making the rounds:


Tim Dwight
"Stanford's Christian McCaffrey reminds me of Iowa Hawkeyes legend Tim Dwight. Dude could score anytime he touched the ball."

Cousins is certainly correct about McCaffrey, as Hawkeye fans found out in the Rose Bowl game.

McCaffrey did a number [well, actually, lots of numbers] on Iowa in Stanford's 45-16 victory. 
 
Christian McCaffrey

The 19-year-old sophomore scored on the first play of the game--a brilliant 75-yard pass play--and  set a Rose Bowl record with 368 all-purpose yards.

He has quite a future ahead of him. 

The son of former National Football League standout Ed McCaffrey will  a favorite [at least my favorite] for the 2016 Heisman Trophy, and is certain to be an NFL standout after completing his Stanford career.

Dwight had quite a banner collegiate and NFL career himself.

However, Iowa fans never thought Hayden Fry, his coach at Iowa, got Dwight the ball often enough.

They always wanted more from the 5-8, 185-pounder who lettered as a Hawkeye from 1994 through 1997.

Dwight finished his Iowa career with Big Ten records  for punt return yardage [1,102] and punts returned for touchdowns [5]. 

Dwight held the Hawkeye record for career receiving touchdowns [21] until 2011, when his numbers were surpassed by Marvin McNutt. 

He held the team record for career receiving yards [2,271] until 2010, when Derrell Johnson-Koulianos surpassed those figures.  

In 1997, Dwight was a consensus first-team all-American and finished seventh in the Heisman Trophy voting.

In a standout NFL career, Dwight played for the Atlanta Falcons, Sanr Diego Chargers, New England Patriots, New York Jets and Oakland Raiders.
Kirk Cousins

Ralph Woodard, his grandfather, was a defensive end and tight end for Iowa in 1945, 1947, 1948 and 1949. He received undergraduate and medical degrees from the university. He had a Fort Dodge and Okoboji background.

Cousins was a Hawkeye fan as a kid, but wound up starring as a quarterback at Michigan State before going to the NFL.